An effective approach is proposed for obtaining a long-distance THz diffraction-free beam with meter-scale length. Multiple 3D-printed lens-axicon doublets are cascaded to form the generation system. In order to manifest the physical mechanism behind the generation process of this long-distance diffraction-free beam, we make a detailed comparative analysis of three beams: the ideal Bessel beam, the quasi-Bessel beam generated by single axicon, and the diffraction-free beam generated by the lens-axicon doublets. Theoretical results show that the zero-radial-spatial-frequency component plays a key role during the generation process of the third beam. Moreover, the intensities of this component are enhanced with the increase in the number of lens-axicon doublets, making the diffraction-free length longer. An experiment containing three lens-axicon doublets is performed to demonstrate the feasibility of our design. A 0.1-THz beam with one-meter diffraction-free length was successfully generated. Further experiments indicate that this THz diffraction-free beam also has a self-healing property. We believe that such long-distance diffraction-free beams can be used in practical THz remote sensing or imaging.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.408692DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

diffraction-free beam
20
lens-axicon doublets
20
thz diffraction-free
12
beam
9
diffraction-free
8
generation process
8
long-distance diffraction-free
8
beam generated
8
diffraction-free length
8
lens-axicon
5

Similar Publications

Optical vortex ladder via Sisyphus pumping of Pseudospin.

Nat Commun

September 2024

The MOE Key Laboratory of Weak-Light Nonlinear Photonics, TEDA Institute of Applied Physics and School of Physics, Nankai University, Tianjin, China.

Robust high-order optical vortices are much in demand for applications in optical manipulation, optical communications, quantum entanglement and quantum computing. However, in numerous experimental settings, a controlled generation of optical vortices with arbitrary orbital angular momentum remains a challenge. Here, we present a concept of "optical vortex ladder" for the stepwise generation of optical vortices through Sisyphus pumping of pseudospin modes in photonic graphene.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper introduces a structured beam with Archimedes spiral intensity distribution. The Archimedes spiral (AS) beam is the composite of a helical-axicon generated (HAG) Bessel beam and a Gaussian (GS) beam. We observed the spiral intensity patterns using computational holography, achieving the tuning over spiral arms number and spiral spacing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A terahertz (THz) fan-beam computed tomography (CT) system using a 0.3 THz continuous-wave sheet beam is proposed. The diffraction-free sheet beam expands in a fan shape in only one direction and provides propagation-invariant focal lines and extended the depth-of-field.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This article presents a terahertz (THz) fast line-scanning imaging system with three-dimensional (3-D) focus-steering capability operating at 0.1 THz. The system comprises a 3-D printed rotating multi-prism plate and a dual-device structure consisting of a negative ridge pyramid and a column ridge pyramid.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We proposed a new manipulation method for Bloch surface waves that can almost arbitrarily modulate the lateral phase through in-plane wave-vector matching. The Bloch surface beam is generated by a laser beam from a glass substrate incident on a carefully designed nanoarray structure, which can provide the missing momentum between the two beams and set the required initial phase of the Bloch surface beam. An internal mode was used as a channel between the incident and surface beams to improve the excitation efficiency.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!